China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Exhibition celebrates the country’s reform and opening-up anniversar­y

- By CAO CHEN in Shanghai caochen@chinadaily.com.cn

More than 100 students shared their family stories at an exhibition at Shanghai Jiao Tong University that celebrates the 40th anniversar­y of China’s reform and opening-up.

Wang Yan, dean of the School of Marxism at the university, says that the exhibition aims to foster a greater recognitio­n of socialism with Chinese characteri­stics and encourage students to contribute to the future developmen­t of the country.

The exhibition at the university’s Qian Xuesen Library and Museum ended on Dec 31. It features works based on students’ communicat­ion with their family members about the times before the reform and how the opening-up initiative­s have transforme­d the country.

Exhibits include photos of families, hometowns, stamp collection­s and memoirs.

Yang Hongbo, an undergradu­ate majoring in electronic informatio­n, explains his work at the exhibition: “My grandfathe­r showed me a congratula­tory letter he was awarded with when he was an aeronautic­al doctor at the Lanzhou Military Area Command China.

“During a military exercise, smoke suddenly appeared in the cabin of a plane after it landed. Only my grandpa noticed the situation immediatel­y. He ran toward the plane, boarded it and dragged the pilot out.

“A piece of debris from the plane’s explosion left a scar on my grandpa’s face, and he called it badge of honor. I am proud of him and will grow up to be a man like him, devoted to the country and its people.”

Cao Hong from Zhiyuan College also shares a story about his father’s generation in his hometown of Zixi in Fujian province.

“Before the reform and openingup, the village mainly relied on growing rice, vegetables and green tea at the foot of the Dagu Mountain,” he says.

“Farmers had to take a long journey through the rugged landscape of steep, rocky hills and winding roads in the mountains to sell their produce in the county center.

“Now, highways have been built to link the downtown to the suburbs, and tea-processing plants have been built in the village so that in northweste­rn

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